Kind of a spin off from the do you like your job thread, looking back, did you predict that your job now is what you would be doing today? I can honestly say that when I graduated college I wouldn't have thought that I would be doing what I'm doing now. I really expected to be using my degree more so in the financial analysis realm or banking realm, but now I'm in insurance. That's mostly because banking jobs in a small town are extremely hard to come by, but I don't know, I just saw myself doing something totally different. What about you?
Re: Spinoff: Did you see yourself in the job you have now?
Definitely not!
I went for a degree in English, thinking I'd be the next J.K Rowling or a high powered lawyer or some shit (yeah I was pretty naïve).
Lo and behold I work in finance. I do enjoy it though, and I don't think I would feel secure going down the writing/journalism route because job security/pay isn't as great. And I didn't end up pursuing law because I just couldn't picture myself being in school right away for another 4 years.
It would be nice to get back into writing as a hobby though.
Formerly martha1818
Definitely not. I didn't think I would ever be "good enough" to be hired by my company. I always assumed they only hired Harvard grads or something like that. I still feel lIke I fooled them somehow into hiring me. Lol.
On a side note, these threads have been good for me though. Seeing people talk about the plus sides of the jobs they hate has definitely prompted me to try and change my perspective a bit.
I totally agree here!
Live fast, die young. Bad Girls do it well. Suki Zuki.
I don't think I really now that compliance/regulatory affairs work even existed so I certainly didn't see myself in it.
I always hoped I'd end up in a sports marketing type of job or at least in a marketing position. Fell into compliance work and here I am.
I spent a year applying for competitive MBA programs and spent 2 years working towards a consumer marketing degree. I got the dream internship then the dream job. I hated both. When an old boss started a company, I reached out and begged for a job (My version of the story. She claims that she hounded me until I agreed to work for her. Regardless, it works).
Now I'm back to doing what I did before grad school but I came in earlier. It's everything I loved about the old company but nothing like what I went to grad school for. However, I would never have the title, responsibility, or power that I have now without the university degree.
I majored in English & Textual Studies and Political Science in college. I had dreams that I was goign to be a lawyer some day and make bank. By my senior of college I was so burnt out on school that, like @lovegood90, I couldn't imagine continuing for another 3, 4, or 5 years. Plus I was already massively in debt and couldn't stomach adding on anymore. I figured I'd take a break and go back in a few years.
7 years later, I'm working for a health and life insurance broker. Totally NOT what I expected to be doing. I only ended up on this path because I was broke a year after college graduation and desperate for a full time job. I had worked on a state senate race and ended up unemployed after our candidate lost. I didn't want to keep doing that work because you never knew when you could be out of a job, plus the pay sucked, even though I loved doing it. A friend of mine worked at an insurance broker who was hiring for entry level positions and I've been in this field ever since. Luckily, I love my current job and I'm quite good at it, just got promoted, and my pay and benefits are pretty great. I have job security, our bills are paid and we have plenty of fun money leftover every month.
H went to school for history and ended up working for the local bank. He's now a personal banker working on getting his CFP certification. So neither of us is doing anything with our degrees and paying LOTS every month in student loans.